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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
HERBERT L CONNER, M.D.
ADMINISTRATOR
CONNER INTERMEDIATE
CARE HOME
GLENWOOD, GEORGIA
February 14, 1972
Pursuant to statutory re
quirements of Title #6, Civil
Rights Administration -1964 -
and regulations of Department
of Health Administration and
Welftre, Conner Intermediate
Care Home announces to the
community, the following open
admission policy.
It is the policy of Conner
Intermediate Care Home to
admit and treat all patients
without regard to race, creed,
color or national origin. The
same requirements of ad
mission will apply to all of
their patients and assign
ments to Canner Intermediate
Care Home without regard to
race, creed, color or national
origin. There is no distinc
tion in eligibility for or in the
manner of providing for any
patient thru Conner Inter
mediate Care Home. The
ftcilities of Conner Inter
mediate Care Home are avail
able without distinction of all
patients or visitors regard
less of race, creed, color
or national origin.
48-ts
PUBLICATION OF
INCORPORATION
'^CONTEMPORARY CON
TRACTING, INCORPORAT
ED”
TO: THE WHEELER COUNTY
EAGLE, THE OFFICIAL
ORGAN OF WHEELER COUN
TY, GEORGIA.
On application at HARRY
L. BRETT, whose address
is Route #2, Alamo, Georgia
sO4ll, and ROGER SMITH,
whose address is Route #l,
Glenwood, Georgia 30428,
Articles of Incorporation have
been granted to CONTEMP
ORARY CONTRACTING, IN
CORPORATED fay the Honor
able James B. O'Connor,
Judge of Superior Court of
Wheeler County, Georgia, in
accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporation Code.
The registered office of the
corporation is located at P. 0.
Box 567, Alamo, Georgia
Land Clearing - Earlh Moving
Landscaping
Custom Farm Land Preparation
BROWNING BROTHERS
Carl Browning Tommy Browning
Glenwood, Ga. Mcßae, Ga.
523-5381 868-5571
;3ras&ari|®^^
TOP PRICES
For Pulpwood
WALLACE ADAMS
Woodyards
GLENWOOD ALAMO
HELENA VIDALIA
30411 and its registered
agents at such address are
HARRY L. BRETTandROGER
SMITH. The purpose of the
corporation is the construc
tion and sale of residential
housing units; the construc
tion and sale of commercial
buildings and structures; the
acquisition and development
of land for residential and
commercial purposes; and to
engage into any enterprise
necessary, desirable or inci
dental to any of its principal
businesses. The minimum
capital with which the cor
poration stall commence
business is 1 IVE HUNDRED
& 00/100 ($500.00) DOL LARS.
tarry W. Dowdy
Attorney at taw
P. O. Box 266
Mcßae, Georgia 31055
Attorney for Incorporators
5-4 t
GEORGIA;
WHEELER COUNTY
There will be sold at Public
Outcry to the highest bidder
for cash, between the legal
hours ofsale before the Court
house Door in Wheeler Coun
ty, Georgia, on the first Tues
day in June, 1972, the follow
ing described property To-
Wit:
One (1) 1970 New Moon
Mobile Home; Manufacturer’s
ID No; 711952.
Said property levied on and
will be sold to satisfy Mort
gage Fl Fa against Elvin C.
Hartley in favor of G.A.C.
Forest Investment Corpora
tion.
J. M. Johnson
Sheriff Wheeler County
5-4 t
GEORGIA,
WHEELER COUNTY:
IN RE: Mitchell Grain Co.,
Inc.
On application of W. J. Mit
chell, Articles of Incorpora
tion have been granted to
MITCHELL GRAIN COM
PANY, INC. by the Honorable
James B. O’Connor, Judge
of the Superior Court of
Wheeler County, Georgia, in
accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporation Code.
The Registered Office of the
Corporation is P. O. Box 557,
Alamo, Georgia, and its regis
tered agent at such address
is W. J. Mitchell. The purpose
of the Corporation is to raise,
produce, buy, sell and other
wise deal in any and all kinds
of farm and grain products,
including all tools, machinery,
equipment and supplies used
in any direct or incidental
connection therewith; and to
do any and all acts and things
necessary, convenient, ex
pedient, ancillary, or in aid
to the accomplishment of the
foregoing. The minimum cap
ital with whichthe Corporation
stall commence business is
$500.00.
Eric Jones
James V. Hilburn
Attorneys for the Incorporator
4-4 t
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
WHEELER, STATE OF
GEORGIA
CIVIL ACTION,
FILE NUMBER 3696
COMPLAINT FOR DIVORCE
Filed on the 28th day of April,
1972, Order for Service by
Publication dated the 28th day
of April, 1972.
ANNIE FAY BROWN
MILLIGAN,
Plaintiff
vs.
TERRY DELANO MILLIGAN,
Defendant
The Defendant TERRY
DELANO MILLIGAN, is here
by commanded personally or
by Attorney, to be and appear
in the Superior Court to be
held in and for said County
within sixty (60) days from
the date of the Order for
Service by Publication, as
. Herman Talmadge
* REPORTS FROM THE UNITED STATES SENATE
'HIE SENATE has overwhelmingly approved a major legis
lative program to revitalize rural areas and small towns through
out the nation. By a vote of 78-0, the Senate adopted the Rural
Development Act of 1972, on which I have been working for
more than two years.
The big vote was a strong indication of growing national
awareness of the importance of developing programs to achieve
a better social and economic balance between rural and urban
America. This is necessary to breathe new life into the declin
ing countryside. It is vital to relieving some of the pressures on
our cities, which already are becoming almost unlivable and
ungovernable because of congestion and a multitude of other
critical problems.
* ♦ ♦
ALTHOUGH WE FOUGHT HARI) for it in the Senate, a
provision of the bill providing for a rural development bank
system, similar to the existing successful Farm Credit System,
was deleted. This was due to a number of factors, not the least
of which was partisan politics.
I regret very much that this important problem was subjected
to partisanship, but we lost Republican senators 8-1. We carried
Democratic senators 3-1, but absenteeism took its toll. Sixteen
Democratic senators were absent, and had they been present,
this section of the bill might have been preserved.
In any event, we succeeded in a major thrust forward in the
most comprehensive rural development ever conceived or
passed by a house of Congress. We still must go to conference
with the House on this legislation, but 1 am confident we will
bring out a good bill.
♦ » »
A QUESTION OFTEN ARISES about how rural redevelop
ment is related to the urban crisis. Rural problems are directly
related to urban problems. Rural decline of the past 25 years
or more has become the urban crisis of today.
For years millions of people have fled the countryside and
become jammed into metropolitan areas. The federal govern
ment has spent some $l6O billion on trying to alleviate the
problems of crime, pollution, welfare, housing and transporta
tion which plague cities. We have to admit these problems are
worse today than before we spent the first dollar.
So long as people continue to massively migrate to the city,
especially the unskilled, the urban crisis will worsen. We must
first tackle the rural crisis, which started the urban crisis in the
first place.
Murchison Funeral Home
Owned And Operated By
<
Mr. and Mrs. Julian W. Ouzls
Telephone 537-4121
537-7305
Agent For United Family Life
Insurance Company
VIDALIA GEORGIA
above set forth, then and there
to answer the Plaintiff’s com
plaint in the above captioned
case, else the Court will pro
ceed as to justice shall apper
tain.
WITNESS the Honorable
James B. O’Connor, Judge of
Superior Court, this the 28th
day of April, 1972.
/s/ L. R. Clark,
Clerk of Superior Court
Wheeler County, Georgia
For the Honorable James
B. O’Connor, Judge of
Superior Courts
Oconee Judicial Circuit 5-4 t
PETITION FOR
INCORPORATION
GEORGIA,
WHEELER COUNTY
On application of Ralph P.
Brooks, Gregory J. Brooks,
Mrs. Hazel W. Brooks, and
Mrs. Maryß. Brooks, of Glen
wood, Wheeler County, Geor
gia, Articles of Incorporation
have been granted to “Brooks
Southern Enterprises, Inc.,”
by the Honorable James B.
O’Connor, Judge of the
Superior Court of Wheeler
County, Georgia, in ac
cordance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporation Code.
The registered office of the
corporation is located on U.
S. Highway #2BO, Glenwood,
Wheeler County, Georgia, and
its registered agent is Ralph
P. Brooks, whose address is
P. O. Box 207, Glenwood,
Wheeler County, Georgia. The
purpose of the corporation is
for pecuniary gain and profit
and the general nature of the
business of the corporation
is that of carrying on com
mercial operations of all
types, especially buying and
selling automobiles and real
estate. The minimum capital
with which the corporation
shall commence business is
$2,500.00.
This the 3rd day of April,
1972.
B. P. Jackson, Jr.
Attorney for Applicant
P. 0. Box 7,
Vidalia, Ga. 30474 2-4 t
Veterans News
EDITOR’S NOTE: Veterans
and their families are asking
thousands of questions con
cerning the benefits their
Government provides forthem
through the Veterans Admin
istration. Below are some
representative queries. Addi
tional information may be ob
tained at any VA office.
Q — Will VA pay education
allowances for veterans to
attend any school or pursue
any educational program?
A— The course or pro
gram must not be barred by
law and it must lead to a
recognized educational, vo
cational or professional ob
jective. Also, schools must
be approved by their respec
tive state-approving agencies.
Q — Am I still eligible
for a GI loan based on the
death of my husband in service
in 1946?
A-- Yes. The Veterans
Housing Act of 1970 restored
unused, expired loan benefits
to World War II and Korean
Conflict veterans and their
unremarried widows.
Q — My father, a World
War II veteran, draws a VA
pension because he is unable
to work. Can he be treated
in a VA hospital if his con
dition is not related to his
military service?
A— Yes, if a VA exami
nation confirms he needs hos
pitalization and a bed is avail
able. Since he is on pension,
it is not necessary for him
to sign a statement of in
ability to pay.
Talmadge Still
Won Victory For
Rural America
Despite the Senate defeat
of the national rural develop
ment bank provision in his
Rural Development Act of
1972, U. S. Sen. Herman E.
Talmadge said Senate passage
of the remainder of his rural
development bill is “a giant
step forward” in the move
ment to revitalize rural
America.
First Senate action on his
bill came when the rural de
velopment bank section was
defeated by a vote of 44 to 32.
This was followed by passage
of the remainder of the bill
by a 77-0 vote.
Sen. Talmadge, ctairman
of the Senate Agriculture
Committee, who has been
working on rural development
legislation for more than two
years, laid the defeat of the
rural bank provision squarely
at the feet of the Nixon ad
ministration and large bank
ing interests.
“Together,” the Georgia
senator said, “they were too
much to fight. We had to fight
the Dept, of Agriculture, giant
banks, the mortgage lenders,
and the giant investment
banks.”
However, the bill as passed
would provide nearly $5-bil
lion for rural development
over the next five years. Fol
lowing passage, the measure
was sent into House-Senate
conference.
Even with the rural develop
ment bank deleted, Sen. Tal
madge described the legis
lation “as the greatest step
forward ever made” in the
national effort to improve the
quality of life in America’s
rural areas.
If approved by the House,
the bill would for the first
time spell out a plan designed
to halt the population migra
tion from rural to urban areas
fiy stimulating employment
and generally' improving the
quality of life in small towns
and the countryside.
Remaining in the bill after
the Senate acted were sec
tions includingthe President’s
§SOO-million a year rural
revenue sharing program,
fluids for cleaningthe environ
ment and developing re
sources, expansion of rural
development extension pro
grams and increased loan pos
sibilities for farmers.
While Sen. Talmadge na
turally was disappointed that
his rural development pank
proposal was rejected, he
still says “this is landmark
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GA. 30411 FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1972
Classiiied Ads
FOR SALE - 6 acres more
or less. City property located
between Tommy Owens and
Mrs. L. M. Achord. City sew
erage and water already on
property. If interested phone
568-2577. 42-ts
REDUCE safe & fast with
Goßese Tablets & E-Vap
“water pills” Curl’s
Pharmacy, Alamo. 2-6 t
FOR SALE - Fresh tomatoe
plants, at my home here.
Berry Coppage, Alamo, Ga.
52-ts
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT -
12x60, 2 bedroom, air con
ditioned, completely furnish
ed. Private lot and water furn
ished. Call 568-3011, daytime
or 568-5851 at night. 1-ts
legislation. It will provide a
strategy for survival of rural
areas throughout the nation.
It can truly be a Magna Carta
for rural America.”
Maddox Praises
Soil And Water
Protection Plan
Lt. Gov. Lester G. Maddox
said the efforts of soil and
water conservationists topro
tect the environment and in
crease the usefulness of na
tural resources are often
being wrongfully criticized.
At the same time, he warned
against “radicals exploiting
the ecology issues to further
their own selfish goals.”
His remarks came in a
speech to the Broad River
Soil and Water Conservation
District’s annual supervisors
meeting held in Homer. Mad
dox commended the members
for the success of their own
programs and lauded soil
and water conservationists
throughout Georgia for their
work.
“Through these good
works,” he said, “countless
acres of land and millions
of gallons of water have been
saved and revitalized. Your
important contributions have
meant reclaimed land, fresh
water for crop irrigation and
livestock, and new life for
towns and communities
throughout Georgia, and every
’ ■ * S Government does not c»» Dr lhf» •
© . ... .....
Oecartmant of the tr««* u ry ano t"» C
The
Payroll
Savings Plan
is for people
who can’t
save a buck.
Ever notice how your paycheck sort of
slips through your fingers before you get
around to stashing a little away for the
future?
Ever have a dream about a vacation,
or a cottage you want, or a college fund
you’re going to build for your kids .. .
then wake up ten years later just to find
out you're no closer to making your
dream come true than you were when
you first had it?
You're not alone.
Everybody has trouble saving a buck
these days. And. that’s why there’s a
Payroll Savings Plan. Sign up where you
work and an amount you specify will be
set aside from each paycheck and used
to buy U.S. Savings Bonds. Before you
can get your hands on it. Before you can
spend it.
Take stock in America.
Join the Payroll Savings Plan.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE
PUBLISHED FRIDAYS
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF WHEELER COUNTY
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office in Alamo,
Georgia, under Act of March 3, 1879
' * ■■
Published at Alamo, Georgia, By
EAGLE PUBLISHING COMPANY
GWENDOLYN B. COX Editor and Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year (In Wheeler County) $2.00
Six Months (In Wheeler County) | $1.25
One Year (Outside W’heeler County) $2.50
Six Months (Cutside Wheeler County) $1.50
Subscriptions Plus 3% Sales Tax Payable In Advance
NATION Al EDITORIAL
’ ' I I A C&T I
citizen owes you a debt of
gratitude.”
Maddox acknowledged that
soil and water conservation
programs have occasionally
come under fire from some
elements within the ecology
movement, but he said that
the districts’ substantial con
tributions to the environment
and the economy made the
criticism undeserved.
“The legitimate ecology
movement has done a great
deal for this country, and we
need to see the movement
gather momentum and in
fluence,” he said. “Butpeople
shouldn’t let themselves be
taken in by some of the radi
cals who have infiltrated the
movement and are exploiting
it for reasons that tave noth
ing to do whatever with en
vironmental preservation and
protection.
“Some of them have simply
seized upon the ecology' issue
to mask their real purpose,
which is to carry out more
attacks upon industry and
widen the war upon private
enterprise and private prop
erty rights.” He added:
“We sometimes find that
the ones waging this war are
as far out as the agitators
who have used the civil rights
movement to wreck and ruin
public education, and in fact,
the people themselves are
often one and the same.
“What attracted them to
the ecology movement in the
first place was that it was a
legitimate cause with good
people in it and a good name.
And if they hadn’t found
It won’t be too long before you have a
nice nest egg built up, a bankroll that’s
really worth something.
Join the Payroll Savings Plan. It's
helped a lot of people . . . just like you.
I =3 - ■
-1 SERIES E ~~ lO 000 OOP POPE J
Now E Bonds pay ‘ interest when held to
irs, 10 months (4% the first
year Bonds are replaced if lost, stolen, or V-
destroyed When needed they can be cashed ♦ *
at your bank Interest is not subject to state C.
or local income taxes, and federal tax may
be deferred until redemption
ecology, they would have found
something else.”
Ten Georgia
Hospitals Join
SIS Project
Ten Georgia hospitals have
announced they will partici
pate in the Systems Improve
ment Services (SIS) project.
SIS, which began April 1,
is a shared management en
gineering service which will
facilitate improvements in
management systems.
The program is designed
to bring about increased ef
ficiency and economy through
the use of graduate industrial
engineers of HSRC, who will
spend a few days each month
with the participating hos
pitals.
The participating hospitals
include three in Atlanta area
— the DeKalb General Hos
pital in Decatur; Kennestone
Hospital in Marietta; and
Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta.
Other participating hos
pitals are: Union General,
Blairsville; the Georgia Warm
Springs Foundation Hospital,
Warm Springs; Hall County
Hospital, Gainesville; St.
Mary’s, Athens.
Jon L. Hutcheson Memorial
Tri-County Hospital, Fort
Oglethorpe; McCall Hospital,
Rome; and Walton County
Hospital in Monroe.
In Oklahoma you cannot take
a bite of another person**
hamburger.